Man of the Year by the Moore County Community Foundation. Bruton founded Connect-inc., a nonprofit that helps post-welfare clients
find and keep jobs. James Gooden Exum
Jr. (’ 57 AB) of Greensboro, a lawyer who leads
Smith Moore LLP’s appellate practice group,
has been named Distinguished Jurist in Residence by the Elon University School of Law.
Exum was appointed to the N.C. Supreme
Court in 1974 and served as chief justice from
1986 until he retired in 1994. He served as the
GAA’s vice president from 1969 to 1970 and
president from 1987 to 1988. Robert Leon
Farmer (’ 55 BSBA, ’ 60 LLB) of Raleigh, a
retired N.C. Superior Court judge, has been
appointed chairman of the State Ethics Commission of North Carolina. Joel Lawrence
Fleishman (’ 55 AB, ’ 59 JD, ’ 60 MA) of Chapel
Hill has been selected to serve as 2006-07
chair for the visiting committee of the John F.
Kennedy School of Government at Harvard
University. Henry Ell Frye (’ 59 JD) of
Greensboro, a former N.C. Supreme Court
chief justice, has received the 2006 Justice
Award from the American Judicature Society,
along with his wife, Shirley, recently retired
from her position as vice president of community affairs with WFMY News2. The Fryes
organized the National Conference on Preventing the Conviction of Innocent Persons,
which led to the creation of the AJS Institute
of Forensic Science and Public Policy in
Greensboro. R. Charles Loudermilk Sr.
(’ 50 BSBA) of Atlanta, chairman and CEO of
Aaron Rents Inc., which he started in 1955, has
received the 2006 Kenan-Flagler Business School
Leadership Award from the Kenan-Flagler
Alumni Association. Loudermilk is a former
co-chairman of the Atlanta Action Forum and
a donor to UNC, providing many of the new
facilities at the Paul J. Rizzo Conference Center
at Meadowmont. Roy Parker Jr. (’ 52, ’ 55
ABJO) of Fayetteville, lifelong journalist and
historian, has received the 2006 North Carolina Award for Public Service. Parker, the
founding editor of the Fayetteville Times, was a
contributing editor and wrote the paper’s book
column until his retirement in 2001. He is a
former member of the GAA Board of Directors and received the GAA’s Distinguished Service Medal in 2002. Barbara Stockton
Perry (’ 50 LLB) of Kinston, a retired member
of Perry, Perry & Perry law firm and a former
Lenoir County judge, has been selected to
serve as 2006-07 chair of the senior lawyers
division of the N.C. Bar Association.
Leonard Robert Rosenbluth (’ 57 AB) of
Fort Myers, Fla., member of the legendary ’ 57
UNC basketball team, will be inducted into
the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame and
Museum in April. S. Jackson Webster Jr.
(’ 56) of Madison, a lawyer with the Berger
You Planned Your Children’s Future …
Now Plan for Your Own!
Just as you planned for your children’s education many years before
they started college, you must start planning well in advance for your
retirement years.
People choose to live at Carol Woods because it gives them the
independence and time to try new things and make a difference in the
community that surrounds them. On any given day, you’ll find
Carol Woods’ residents doing everything from mentoring a student,
volunteering in the community or preserving a wildlife habitat, to
spending time at the on-campus Children’s Center.
Start planning today for an active tomorrow filled with opportunities for
continued learning, growing, and contributing!
1-800-518-9333
750 Weaver Dairy Rd., Chapel Hill, NC 27514 •
info@carolwoods.org
www.carolwoods.org • Carol Woods is an accredited, not-for-profit community